Do You Have The Guts Not To Fight?
Apr 21 2013
I saw the movie 42 this weekend and it was *very* inspiring. The theater was packed and people applauded when it was over. Based on my movie going experience, it’s not often that people applaud after a movie. It was about Jackie Robinson, the first African-American baseball player. The movie portrayed what he went through to make a name in America’s top sport in the 1940’s.
One line from the movie that resonated with me was said by Branch Ricky, a team executive, played by Harrison Ford in response to Jackie saying “do you want a player who doesn’t have the guts to stand up from himself?” He responded and told Jackie he wanted a player with the “guts not to fight” (or something like that), when people would surely treat him awfully because of his race, in order to make history and become a baseball legend. It would be extremely hard for most people to sit back and experience the horrible, racist things he had to endure from slurs to being denied a hotel to stay in when he was on the road with his team. Yet, he apparently had the strength to “turn the other cheek.”
Yes, sometimes it takes more guts not to fight as people like MLK and Gandhi have demonstrated. Fortunately for Jackie, he had talent, desire, a little luck, and passion for the sport of baseball. He knew he wanted to win at baseball more than he wanted to rightly punch somebody or stoop to their level. Like many entrepreneurs, he focused on the end goal and didn’t let the mean spirited, those scared of tolerance/change, or the onslaught of scathing words get him down.
Author: Aruni | Filed under: entrepreneurship, movie reviews | Tags: 42, baseball, harrison ford, jackie robinson | 2 Comments »
That’s a great concept. Have you ever heard of Wu Wei? It’s this idea in Taoism of “the action of non-action”.
Hi Perry, I have not heard of Wu Wei…sounds like an interesting concept. Sometimes not acting can have more of an impact than acting … especially if the acting is done without forethought.